Flu Vaccine Less Helpful to Seniors

July 31, 2008 -- Flu vaccines offer seniors far less pneumonia protection than was thought, a carefully designed study shows.

It's a big surprise. Earlier studies found huge decreases in illness and death among seniors who got their annual flu shots. But it's now becoming clear that flaws in these studies inflated the benefits of flu vaccination in the elderly.

A new, carefully controlled study corrects those errors. It finds that flu vaccination does not significantly protect seniors against all-cause pneumonia during flu season, says Michael L. Jackson, PhD, who worked on the study at Seattle's Group Health Center for Health Studies. He's now a medical epidemiologist with CDC.

"We don't know how the flu vaccine works in older seniors or in seniors with chronic health problems. We thought we did, but now we see we don't," Jackson tells WebMD. "We cannot say there is no benefit. But we can no longer say there is a 20% to 30% lower risk of pneumonia. It could more like 5% or 10%."

Flu Shot Still Advised

So why do Jackson and other experts continue to advise elderly people to get their flu shots every year?

It's because the Jackson study measured protection against pneumonia from all causes taken together. Flu vaccine only protects against flu-related pneumonia. And studies suggest that except during exceptionally severe flu seasons, flu accounts for no more than 15% of pneumonia cases.

This means the flu vaccine probably does what it's supposed to do -- even though elderly people who get their flu shots still risk pneumonia from non-flu causes, suggest Edward A. Belongia, MD, of Wisconsin's Marshfield Clinic Research Foundation and David Shay, MD, MPH, of the CDC's influenza branch.

"To take the positive view, the vaccine's effectiveness in preventing flu could be a lot higher," Belongia tells WebMD. Jackson and colleagues could not tell which pneumonia cases were due to flu. So the overall effectiveness against pneumonia may be quite low, but it may work quite well against flu-related pneumonia.

In an editorial accompanying Jackson and colleagues' report in the Aug. 2 issue of The Lancet, Belongia and Shay calculate that if the flu vaccine is 8% effective at preventing all-cause pneumonia, and flu is behind just 10% of pneumonia cases in a given flu season, the vaccine would actually be about 70% effective in preventing flu-related pneumonia.